Another weight/mass gain thread

This one is post "search function n00b" though. Although...i guess delete it if it's still that bad.

Just thought i'd ask if there were any more specifics.

Currently, i'm 145 pounds/65 kg, and about 187cm, and i'm looking to gain some weight. (Not too much about 5/6 kg), and looking in particular to gain muscle mass, rather than strength. I'm not in a big hurry to gain the weight though, there's no real time limit. (although, obviously the sooner the better).

What i've gotten so far:
1.Gallon of Milk+sqauts!!!!! (or as much milk as you can take)
2.Eat lots
3.Lots of Protein+carbs
4. Strength training
5. No cardio (or at least very little)

Questions:
1.High weight low rep, or the opposite? (i know one is supposed to be for size, but i've heard them mixed around so much, i'm not sure which it is.
2. Should i cut out swimming?
3.I do have a gym membership, but i don't get to go there as often as i'd like, are there any particular exercises i can do at home that would suit well. (I only have two 15lb dumbells, and sit ups/push ups at my disposal at the moment really)
4.At the moment i'm drinking "supermilk" (it's a low fat multivitamin with slightly more), is the low fat element a bad thing if i'm trying to gain muscle mass? Or is fat not really related to muscle mass (or does the protein benefit outweight this negative)
5.What's a realistic time goal to set for this gain? (or to see some of this gain). I've read between .25 and 0.5 pounds per week.
6. Any other advice?

Squats and milk. Seriously. Ditch any cardio (which you have) and ditch swimming.

His first paragraph implies you don't have a clear plan on how to go about it. Also, you are lacking some fundamentals since you are looking at this strictly from a volume/rep point of view.

Squats, back squats are your answers. Also, I don't understand why this question. Rippetoe's starting strength program, the StrongLifts 5x5 program and and DeFranco's WS4SB program have been discussed a zillion times. I find it hard to believe you haven't seen any reference to them.

In any case, either of these three program will give you what you need. At your stage, it is incredibly difficult (if not impossible) to get size gains without getting stronger. You are too slim. Where you already equiped with a somewhat muscular frame, then you could do exercises that maximize muscle hyperthrophy without necessarily optimizing for strength gains.

But from where you are right now, it would be very unwise and counterproductive to try to separate mass gain from strength gains. Choose either of these three programs already mentioned, and followed them as closely as possible to the letter for 12 to 18 months. They are all heavy on the bench press/press, squat and deadlift.

You'll need all those three to make gains. Squats and milk for the next 12-18 months baby.

The street argument is retarded. BJJ is so much overkill for the street that its ridiculous. Unless you're the idiot that picks a fight with the high school wrestling team, barring knife or gun play, the opponent shouldn't make it past double leg + ground and pound - Osiris

In any case, either of these three program will give you what you need. At your stage, it is incredibly difficult (if not impossible) to get size gains without getting stronger. You are too slim.

It wasn't that I was thinking mass and strength gain would be completely different. I realise that obviously i'll gain strength as I gain mass. I was just stating that size increase was my goal, and that strength increase, while also very good, was not my goal.

Thanks for the help. I'll check out the routines, and i'll ditch the swimming.

Edit: I've read that any exercise routine should be started with 10-15 minutes of cardio to get your blood flowing. Should i keep this up, or drop it too?

The street argument is retarded. BJJ is so much overkill for the street that its ridiculous. Unless you're the idiot that picks a fight with the high school wrestling team, barring knife or gun play, the opponent shouldn't make it past double leg + ground and pound - Osiris

The programs previously mentioned provide instructions regarding warming up. In general, you warm up using the same exercises (or similar) that you are to do for that day.

You’ll notice that I don’t list the number of warm-up sets for your main lift on Max-Effort days or Repetition Upper Body days. Instead, I use the term “work up.” This is because the number of warm-up sets you’ll be performing is determined by how strong you are! The stronger you are, the more sets you’ll need to reach your max weight. I favor multiple sets of low reps for warming up on Max-Effort Day and just 1 or 2 sets of 6-8 reps before your first exercise on Rep Upper Body Day.

Before you warm up with weights, however, you should be performing a 5-15 minute general warm-up. Make sure you have a light sweat going before getting under the bar.